The Assassin (continued)
This is the second and last installment of The Assassin.
The couple turned into a
small ally. The glow from the main road street light didn't quite beat back the
darkness lurking in the corners of the dead-end, but a young girl on a
waitresses’ salary couldn't afford better. It worried the boy. This wasn't the
best side of town. This wasn't even the best ally in the worst side of town,
and it was why he began wearing the 9mm in the shoulder holster under the
jacket.
Her wheat-colored hair flowed over her face as she fished
in her purse for the key, and for the thousandth time this evening and perhaps
millionth time since they met six months ago, he marveled at her beauty. In a minute they would be inside, clothes
thrown on the floor, the dark alley forgotten, his lips smothering her neck with
kisses. A rush of cold air brushed the back of the boy’s neck, breaking his
pleasant fantasy. He whipped around, nostrils flaring, eyes wide. He saw
nothing, but then again the dim bulb hanging from the stunted tin roof over the
door only served to exacerbate the surrounding darkness, repainting the ally’s
shadows as it swung gently on its short cord. The girl raised the key with a
small smile and slid it in the lock.
The assassin crouched on
the tin overhang as the boy spun around, and felt it again —something about the
boy made her uneasy. He had only to look up to see—an event that wouldn’t
bother her—but of course he wouldn't look up. It wouldn't cross his mind to
look up; no human could perch on the steep incline of the small dented roof above
the door. But she wasn't human, was she?
Not entirely. If I was entirely human, I wouldn't be here, would I, she asked, loathing pooling in the pit of her
stomach.
She was cautious by nature and training, so she
planned her attack despite the desperate need urging her on. That was the way
her makers—at least her human makers—had designed her. She’d kill the boy
first; he was the only threat. Actually neither was a threat. Her boosted
muscles, reflexes, and mental abilities made her a match for a dozen natural
born. But she was cautious, trained to eliminate the risks that could be
eliminated, and minimize the rest. She’d kill the boy, although it would mean
less to feed on, but she would suck the girl dry as her still-beating heart
pumped the blood to the assassin’s waiting mouth.
Don’t do it,
the tiny voice screamed. Her need almost laughed. I WILL DO IT, it boomed inside her head. The assassin never made a
mistake, but—conflicted to the point of near insanity—she made one now. One of
the tears that had welled in her eye, rolled down her cheeks and to her lips,
reached the tip of her chin, hesitated and then fell to the tin roof, landing
with a soft, clearly audible poink!
The girl turned the key and
the tumblers retracted with a thick click. She swung the light door inward, and
stepped inside the apartment, reaching for the wall light. The boy began to
follow, but then—poink—something, it
sounded like a drop of rain, struck the jutting tin roof. But there was no
rain. The girl continued, but he stepped back, reaching under his jacket.
Damn!
Roughly the assassin wiped her face with the back of her arm. And then looked
down… into the gaping chasm of a pistol muzzle. She knew the specifications of
every gun in existence, and was trained to use most of them. This was an old
Beretta 9mm. Old yes, but also powerful; capable of punching a thumb-sized hole
in her forehead, which is where the boy pointed it, and blowing away the back
of her skull as the tumbling bullet exited.
Damn, damn! Now
she knew the source of her unease. Of course! The boy wore a jacket in the bar.
Why would anyone wear a jacket—even a light jacket—on a balmy night such as
this? And then there was his reaction to her passage. Fear, yes, but also
something in his wheeling about that hinted of more than prey, but rather
predator.
“John!” The girl screamed from the apartment. “What are
you doing!”
“Suze, get back inside, lock the door, and call the
police.” His eyes never left the assassin. Not
bad, she thought.
“But, John,” the girl’s voice wavered, thick with the
sound of approaching tears.
“Just DO IT!” His
eyes never left the assassin’s face. He’s
ready, she thought with a hint of admiration. This boy is ready for
trouble, but, she thought as she
tensed her legs, he isn’t ready for me.
The assassin bared her fangs with a growl-hiss that was half human, half beast,
and leapt.
Complete, knee-buckling
fear was the last emotion the boy felt. He had been frightened by the prowler,
even weirded out —I mean, what the hell,
HOW THE HELL, is she perched above the door— but he had handled it, pulled
the gun, and sent his girl to safety. But that was merely fright; this was
abject, total horror. The… thing… the
…monster (he didn’t know what else to
call it)… was baring its fangs at him, growling. He blinked, unable to believe
his eyes, and then the monster was a mid-air blur. He pulled the trigger and
the gun shattered the summer night, the bullet driving a hole into the tin and
burying itself, in a splash of sparks and exploding brick, into the wall behind
it. But the monster was no longer there; she was overhead, a shadow against the
stars, and he pulled the trigger again. Boom!
The bullet zipped through the ally air, hitting nothing. Then the monster was
behind him, he tried to turn, but its hands were on him, stronger than a vise.
He smelled its breath, oddly sweet, turned his head and stared into the fangs,
inches from his face, and knew he would die. The complete, knee-buckling fear
swept through him like an ice storm, and his world faded to black.
The boy sagged against her and
the Beretta slid from his slack hand into hers. Even Better, the large voice said, I can bleed him while he lives.
No don’t,
you CAN stop, answered the small
voice. I WILL NOT STOP, the need
bellowed, so loud that she thought she might have shouted the words. And, as
always, the need won. The boy’s head lolled in her arms and she bent to the
exposed neck, just below the Adam’s apple, and placed her lips on the warm
flesh.
“No don’t!”
The pounding of her pulse was almost deafening, and
at first she thought it was the tiny voice, but then…
“Please!”
It was louder, book-ended with sobs, and not of her
head. She raised the 9mm till the girl’s face filled the sights. She hadn't gone in like the boy had ordered, but rather, rooted by shock, fear or whatever, she stood in the door. Dark paint stripped her
cheeks. No, it wasn't paint, the assassin corrected herself, but rather rivers
of tears colored with black mascara.
The girl flapped her arms feebly toward her
apartment. “Ya…you can have anything…”
KILL HER! The need boomed.
No! The tiny voice was louder now. Louder than it had
ever been.
“anything,” the girl continued, “even”… another sob…
“me. Just” she held up a trembling hand and closed her eyes, renewing the
tear’s onslaught. They opened, “don’t. Don’t k-kill him.”
Something spoke to the need. Spoke from the girls’
tear-filled eyes. It was an even greater need. The need in the girls eyes when
she looked at the boy, the need for his life, a need deeper than the girls need
to live.
“I… I love him.”
Stop! Ordered the ever-larger tiny voice.
I WILL NO… Yes
you will, the now larger tiny voice commanded. You have loved. You remember. Stop.
The gun’s retort was loud, almost loud enough to
silence the voices, and the girl dropped like a stringless puppet, the back of
her head splattering the door behind. Softly, almost gently, the assassin
pressed her lips to the boy’s throat and bit, the artery’s blessed blood
gushing down her throat and over her chin, mixing with her tears.



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